Evidence That Good Moods Prevent Colds 200
duguk writes in with another reason to keep happy over Christmas. A new scientific study suggests that people who frequently experience positive emotions are less likely to catch colds. Psychologist Sheldon Cohen and his colleagues at Carnegie Mellon University interviewed 193 healthy adults daily for two weeks and recorded the positive and negative emotions they had experienced each day. The researchers then exposed the volunteers to a cold or a flu virus. Those with "generally positive outlooks" reported fewer cold symptoms. From the article: "'We need to take more seriously the possibility that a positive emotional style is a major player in disease risk,' Cohen says... Although a positive emotional style bore no relation to whether participants became infected, it protected against the emergence of cold symptoms. For instance, among people infected by the influenza virus... 28 percent who often reported positive emotions developed coughs, congestion, and other cold symptoms, as compared with... 41 percent who rarely reported positive emotions."
Maybe (Score:5, Insightful)
Cause/effect (Score:2)
Happy->less run-down->less prone to lurgies. Such chains are well understood.
Re:Maybe (Score:5, Insightful)
Important point, my grandmother, as my mother would say, would never bleed, she'd hemorrhage, she'd never get a papercut, it would be a laceration. Frame of mind has a lot to do with how you designate what's wrong with you.
I personally hardly notice or care when most colds come or go because I don't dwell on them. There's people who seem to be always sick, just because they can always find some symptom to complain about. Happy people could've just not even noticed their symptoms, because they aren't in a "woe is me" frame of mind.
People looking for a tragedy in their own lives always find one.
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The immune system is incredibly complex, an parts of it are regulated through the brain. So it shouldn't be surprising that your mood can influence it. Another example: if you look at statistics of people's deaths
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correlation, not cause and effect (Score:5, Insightful)
It's an interesting correlation, but the article/study doesn't give a convincing argument "positive" feelings can prevent illness. It simply reports positive feelings and emotions are closely correlated to resistance to acquiring or displaying symptoms from influenza (rhinovirus).
I don't discount a positive attitude is a good thing to have, but a more rigorous approach could have given better or more convincing results. For example, is it possible some people have a less positive outlook or less positive emotions because they have a less effective immune system and therefor are more often ill (thus introducing a possible reason for the less positive emotions)?
Relatedly, is it possible those with positive outlooks and emotions are just that because they have a strong immune system and are rarely ill?
I'd be interested in seeing a study where some of the "negative" subjects were trained in positive emotions and reintroduced to the study to see if their results are different. I'd like to guess positive feelings positively influences their health, but this study doesn't give that proof.
(My favorite example of this kind of "study" is the correlation between increased sales of ice cream and drownings, leading some to possibly think ice cream increases drowning risk... of course ignoring the fact that ice cream sales increase in warmer weather when more people are swimming.)
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There's also a correlation between milk consumption and crime. The two, of course, are related to rise in population and cutting milk consumption will not prevent crime. Here we could ask: Can a weak immune system cause a negative mood?
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Actually, Alexander Schauss [nih.gov]'s research on the diets of juvenile criminals found that delinquents drank excessive amounts of milk, crowding frutis and vegetables out of the diet; and substituting orange juice or water resulted in a decrease in antisocial behavior. (Unfortunately I don't have a link; it's work from the 1980s, mentioned in passing in one of my dead trees books: "The Healing Arts", Kapt
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That's not the only problem here... (Score:2)
I'd have been more impressed if the researchers had chosen an objective method of measuring symptoms rather than a subjective one.
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If you had actually READ the article, you would have seen THIS bit:
"Each person was quarantined in a separate room and monitored for 5 or 6 days."
Now, how do you equate "self reported" with "monitored"?
Mood has a great deal to do with morbidity. Physicians have known for YEARS that the mortality and morbidity rate for an individual will sky
Maybe you should read more carefully... (Score:2)
Each person was quarantined in a separate room and monitored for 5 or 6 days.
Monitored for what? The article doesn't say. However it DOES say this:
Unlike the negatively inclined participants, they reported fewer cold symptoms than were detected in medical exams.
So the only result was that the people with "positive" outlooks reported less than were actually detected. Isn't that exactly what I said might be a problem with this study?
Mood has a great deal to do with morbidity. Physicians have known for YEAR
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Each person was quarantined in a separate room and monitored for 5 or 6 days. Although a positive emotional style bore no relation to whether participants became infected, it protected against the emergence of cold symptoms. For instance, among people infected by the influenza virus, 14 of 50 (28 percent) who often reported positive emotions developed coughs, congestion, and other cold symptoms, as compared with 23 of 56 infected individuals (41 percent) who rarely reported positive emotions.
I do agree with the GP though. I know some people with chronic diseases and they are significantly less happy than the average person. I doubt that's a coincidence.
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Unlike the negatively inclined participants, they reported fewer cold symptoms than were detected in medical exams.
So what's going on here? It's pretty impossible to say from the article itself. You'd need to read the actual paper.
Re:correlation, not cause and effect (Score:5, Informative)
Correlation does not imply causation.
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No, but correlation is correlated to causation...
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Not anymore.
I guess you could say that you make me sick!
(Yes, I am joking)
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(Boys from the Dwarf!)
Re:correlation, not cause and effect (Score:5, Insightful)
I noted that my colds have a nearly perfect correlation with the level of tiredness. I used to catch an average of more than one cold a month during the winter in the days when I overworked myself, worked extra hours for a prolonged period without compensating with a day off here or there, took work home and otherwise followed the antisocial behaviour pattern loved by slaver PHBs.
Nowdays, I stay strictly within the "green" zone of sub-40h per week at work and do not overdo the recreational coding. As a result I have less than one cold per 4-6 months. I have observed the same correlation in other people.
Unfortunately many PHBs do not grok the phenomenon. They would rather have their staff staring at the monitor at the height of lemsim stupor while checking in ephedrin driven code that has to be thrown out later anyway. Even the fact that the average productivity in the industry in Europe is in nearly perfect inverse proportion to the overtime put in does not make them stop and think for a second.
Re:correlation, not cause and effect (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm asking, "Why so skeptical?"
When you read the article, you see that the people performing the study are well aware that this is only "pointing at" possibilities, not definitively saying, "This is true."
You're requesting more rigor, and I don't think they'd disagree with you. They performed a study. They're looking at the results. The questions that come out of this study will inspire further study.
The article portrays a picture of ambiguity. Sounds about right.
This is not a "study," this is a study proper. Studies do not demand the churning out of new Laws. Its sufficient to frame an experiment, say, "Well, I think it's X; It warrants a further look," and then tell people that.
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Then what's the damn point? Why not do a study that does more than "point" to begin with? The study does not give reliable results. All it says is that there is a correlation. That doesn't prove that it merits more study or not. As in the examples given above, anything can correlate. Doing a study to prove such is a waste
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
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Re:correlation, not cause and effect (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, the answer is "I am now going to plug my controller into port #2."
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Here's a link to the journal abstract [psychosoma...dicine.org].
Although the study was not as inferentially strong as a randomized experiment, it was a prospective design with a number of statistical controls -- so it's a lot better than the ice cream/drowning correlation. Controls included pre-existing antibodies to the virus as well as self-reported health (which researchers usually consider [wkhealth.com] a useful but imperfect proxy for other indicators).
Also, with regard to someone else's comment, they quarantined subjects and measured for
Re:correlation, not cause and effect (Score:4, Informative)
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Influenza != Rhinovirus. Rhinovirus (family Picornaviridae) is the common cold, not the flu (which is Orthomyxoviridae).
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I've been in a horrible mood (Score:2, Funny)
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Well considering that most of the inflammatory substances that cause cold symptoms are produced or metabolized by the liver at some point, perhaps the real problem is that your liver is already shot?
Well.... (Score:2)
You know... (Score:2)
So its true then (Score:3, Funny)
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It's true! (Score:2)
Chicken/egg. (Score:4, Insightful)
RTFS (Score:2)
Editor: A new scientific study suggests that people who frequently experience positive emotions are less likely to catch colds.
Summary: Although a positive emotional style bore no relation to whether participants became infected...
This is why 'literate' people often score so poorly on literacy tests. They can read a five-line summary of something and believe the exact opposite of the conclusion.
agreed! (Score:2)
-Rick
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Sorry for misleading you.
DugUK
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It can sometimes be difficult to translate medicalese
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or maybe... (Score:2)
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Bananas (Score:5, Funny)
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Good moods mean a clean apartment... (Score:2)
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Turns out that keeping a tidy place, standing up straight, speaking with big words, and having a taste for fine scotch and wine before the age of forty are all indicators to the opposite sex that you're a homosexual.
I tend to have much better luck picking up ladies when I'm unshaven and unwashed, hunched over a bar drinking a cheap beer on a sunday night. Something about a sink full of dirty dishes and dirty clothes in a pile on the floor says 'real man' to the lad
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Injections (Score:2)
I just read... (Score:2)
Too bad it won't work in a pick-up line.
Just as I thought.. (Score:2)
Wonder what would happen... (Score:4, Funny)
Human subjects? (Score:2, Insightful)
How the hell did they get that past IRB (Institutional Review Board)?
-c
This is new information? (Score:4, Interesting)
Happiness vs Exposure To Others (Score:2)
Perhaps this may be dictated more by *who* we're exposed to depending on our mood, rather than by our mood itself.
For example, a happy person is probably more likely to go to a random place for entertain among others upon impulse, while unhappy people may be more likely to either be around one or tw
Sunlight is the common cause (Score:3, Interesting)
Moods and flu prevention form a mere correlation from the common cause of sunlight.
... Prevents Good Code (Score:2)
Or else... (Score:2)
Good moods == Good Hormones. (Score:2)
There are long term studies that show people's basic moods do not change.
In my case, everything went to hell about 18 months ago after a lifetime of being very easy going.
All the sudden, I was anxious, irritable, had night sweats, couldn't think straight, was sleeping 9+ hours and still tired, had low sex drive, my reaction speed in sports sucked, and I was getting sick after years of not getting sick. My mood sucked!
After a comprehensive
if you are in a good mood (Score:2)
Proof? Atchoo! There's your proof! (Score:2)
Coming back from getting my motorcycle driver's license, I sneezed all the way from the instructor's to the town house (where I got my license), which is a good ride through the city.
I was already suffering from nervous colds back then. My fellow employees expected the daily sneeze around 3 pm.
It's a dumb thing, really. But it's there. Sneezing to break the nervous tension. And it feels lame
That explains things (Score:2)
Well, that would probably be why I have a really bad cold right now, and have for the last 3 days. You f*ckers. (j/k)
More likely. . . (Score:2)
Jack Handy (Score:4, Informative)
positive feelings, prayer, etc (Score:2)
Or perhaps people just put a lowe
Actually, their data "proves" the opposite. (Score:2, Insightful)
If happyness prevents illness (Score:2)
I'm living proof (Score:2)
I'm now inside doing a similar job but I work with about two hundred
Who cares about the flu? (Score:2)
missing the obvious (Score:2)
"unhappy people" will complain more.
Fucking obvious.
sheesh.
Bullshit! (Score:2)
So know I have to wonder... (Score:2)
Nope... (Score:2, Informative)
I was introduced to the former Mr. Cohen at Stanford in '98. After reading a few of his papers on the immune system, I would not doubt the legitimacy of his trials. Here's a bit more [wikipedia.org] on his works!
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What, is that his maiden name?
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Unfortunately I'm not familiar with it... digging around on Google, Wikipedia, Amazon and eBay didn't turn up any promising leads. Name of the book please.
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Sorry man, I think you're the only one who blurted out "OMG, thisSheldonCohenisnotthesameastheformerIRStaxcommi ssionerwhowrotethetaxcodein78andistheauthorofthefa mousandcontroversialbook!" upon seeing this s
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Slashdot is definitely the place to ask for tissues...
Re:Bah (Score:4, Insightful)
But having read down the forum posts a bit, I wonder:
Why is curing sickness so important, but the idea of curing sadness gets such scorn?
Re:Bah (Score:4, Informative)
Add to that the stigma that, while sickness is external, and needs treatment, sadness is internal..."in the head" as it were, and thus is a symptom of a weak/unstable mind.
I come down somewhat in the middle myself, so while acknowledging that there are many different types of mental illness that respond well to treatment, I'd never put "sadness" in that category. Being happy and unhappy, in most people, is more about your life than about anything else, and to take a pill to be happy all the time is a little too Brave New World for me.
Re:Bah (Score:4, Interesting)
The cause and effect would then reverse - colds cause bad moods which I would consider quite obvious. I have felts many colds coming on long before they happened - and I am sure that I have read that the most contageous stage of a cold is almost before you 'know' you have it.
Now I am not saying that these 'bad mood' people actually had colds, simply that when your immune system is working hard in one area and leaving you weak in another, it is certainly possible that your moods may be affected.
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Well, for some of us, it's most likely a chemical imbalance. In my case, geneology and medical history have shown that no amount of well-wishing or good life circumstances is going to cure my depression. It comes and it goes, and I can (and have) lived better through chemistry, but I am currently off the meds. The side effects are
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Sickness is by defintion a dysfunction. Sadness is often an appropriate reponse to circumstances - like pain, it tells us that something is wrong. The ability to experience pain is essential to our physical health; the ability to experience sadness is essential to our mental health.
Of course, sometimes pain or sadness can be overwhelming, or there's nothing to be done about their causes at the moment. If I break my leg
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Of course if you had read the article you would have seen the part where the subjects were kept under constant observation for 5 days. They're not just going by the subjective reports.
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The phone stuff here was merely made during the pre-study phase to find out their emotional patterns for the scientists to know who the
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However, I have not been sick.
Yet... (ducking!)
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She went on to say that some badly conducted studies seemed to point to positive thi
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